SF and Fantasy

Today in SF History

This year I’m writing a series of tweets delving into the fascinating history of science fiction and fantasy fandom, and especially the famous genre flame wars of the past. This history is proof positive that our genre's tempests in teapots have always existed and will likely always endure.

While I’d like to believe this history might give people a sense of perspective before engaging in the next SF/F flame war, I’m not holding my clichéd breath.

Below are my first six “Today in SF History” tweets. I should also note that even though these posts were tweeted on particular days, that doesn’t mean those were the official dates these events happened. Think instead of these tweets as today’s 140-character trip down SF memory lane.

Anyone interested in seeing future “Today in SF History” tweets should follow me on Twitter. I also cross-post the tweets on my Facebook and Google+ accounts.

My picks for the 26th annual Asimov's Readers' Poll

The 26th annual Asimov's Readers' Poll is open for votes through February 1. As is the norm, Asimov's had a very strong year in 2011. Unfortunately, I was limited to three votes in each category. But I could have easily voted for twice as many stories.

My votes for the awards are as follows. Please note that while the actual votes for the award are ranked in order of preference, my list is organized by author last name.

Best Novella

  • The Man Who Bridged the Mist—Kij Johnson
  • Kiss Me Twice—Mary Robinette Kowal
  • Stealth— Kristine Kathryn Rusch

Best Novelette

  • Two Thieves—Chris Beckett
  • Clean—John Kessel
  • Corn Teeth—Melanie Tem

Best Short Story

  • Smoke City—Christopher Barzak
  • Shipbirth—Aliette de Bodard
  • Movement—Nancy Fulda

Best Cover

  • September—Maurizo Manzieri
  • March—Marc Simonetti
  • October/November (for “The Man Who Bridged the Mist”)—Paul Youll

“Heaven’s Touch” sells to Asimov’s and I go all touchy-feely daydreaming of childhood SF magazines

AsimovsDec1983
My grandfather's mid-December 1983 copy of Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, featuring the Hugo-winning story "Speech Sounds" by Octavia Butler. Note the mailing label still attached.

Exciting news: my novelette “Heaven’s Touch” has sold to Asimov’s Science Fiction! The story involves a race for survival on a near-future comet and is one of the hardest science fiction tales I’ve written.

This will be my first appearance in Asimov’s and I want to thank Sheila Williams for both accepting the story and giving me a number of excellent suggestions regarding rewrites. I naturally took these suggestions to heart because only a fool argues with a Hugo-winning editor whose ideas vastly improve your story!

Obviously I like Asimov’s since I subscribe to the magazine. However, Asimov’s also played a critical role in my development as a science fiction writer. When I was growing up there were three SF magazines I daydreamed about writing for—Analog, Asimov’s, and Interzone.

Because I grew up in rural Alabama, finding an issue of the British magazine Interzone was out of the question. But I continually noticed that many of the stories I loved in the various “year’s best” collections were first published in Interzone. So while I may not have seen physical copies of Interzone as a young man, the magazine still influenced me greatly.

Analog and Asimov’s were more familiar since my grandfather collected SF magazines. But of the two, my grandfather clearly had a special place in his heart for Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine—as it was then called—because he was a subscriber. I remember once when my mom picked up my grandparent’s mail while they were away on vacation. The mail contained a new issue of Asimov’s and I stared at that magazine for a long time, wondering if my grandfather would notice if I read it first.

I still have copies of my grandfather’s Asimov’s with his mailing label attached. They’re among my most valued heirlooms.

Once I left for college I subscribed to Asimov’s. This was during Gardner Dozois’ famous editorship, when he won the Hugo for best editor nearly every year while the stories he picked also dominated the major awards. On days when the magazine might arrive I’d race to my apartment, hoping to discover a new issue. The first thing I'd read each month were Issac Asimov’s editorials, followed by story after story from groundbreaking authors like Michael Swanwick, Connie Willis, Tanith Lee, Greg Egan, Mike Resnick, and many more. I even submitted a few horrible stories and poems to Gardner during those days—thankfully he rejected them quickly and without fuss.

And now I’ve landed my first Asimov’s acceptance. It’s amazing that I’ve placed stories with all the magazines I used to daydream about. But it’s also damn exciting to place a story in a magazine like Asimov’s, with which I’ve had such a long, loving relationship.

My Epic ConFusion Schedule

After months of slow blogging due to the continual intrusion of that "life" thing, I’m now returning to more regular posting. And the first big news to post is that I’m attending the Epic ConFusion convention from Jan. 20-22 in Detroit. This looks to be an amazing con, with a stellar line-up of authors including

  • Pro GoH -- Patrick Rothfuss
  • Toastmaster -- Jim C. Hines
  • Saladin Ahmed
  • Elizabeth Bear
  • Tobias Buckell
  • Kameron Hurley
  • Jay Lake
  • Cat Rambo
  • John Scalzi
  • Catherine Shaffer
  • Ferret Steinmetz
  • and many, many more.

This will be one of the few con appearances I’ll make this year, so please drop by if you’d like to grab a signed copy of Never Never Stories or simply want to shoehorn me into a in-depth discussion on arcane SF topics.

My schedule is as follows:

10am, Saturday: Grammar Police in Salon F
Anne S. Zanoni, Christian Klaver, Jason Sanford, Charles P. Zaglanis

1pm, Saturday: Science in Fantasy in Salon F
Jason Sanford, Catherine Schaffer, Dr. Phil Kaldon, Jim Hines, Cindy Spence Pape

3pm, Saturday: Reading by Jason Sanford and Bradley Beaulieu in Athens      

5pm, Saturday: Mass Autograph Session in Salon E

8pm, Saturday: Reviews and Criticism in Niles
Gretchen Ash, Howard Andrew Jones, Jason Sanford, Christine Purcell, Robin Hobb

11am, Sunday:  Small Stories in Epic Fantasy in Salon E
Bradley Beaulieu, Robin Hobb, Patrick Rothfuss, Jason Sanford, Brent Weeks

If you’re attending the con, I hope you'll look for me and say hello.

Strange Horizons and Successful Online Magazines

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

Online speculative fiction magazines are held to a strange standard of success. Even though the best e-zines reach far more readers than most genre print magazines, there are continual questions on the viability of these online publications. One of the most recent regurgitations on this theme came from Simon Owens, who asked on his site, Bloggasm, if genre e-zines will ever find a profitable model.

Owens’s essay yielded a ton of predictable outrage as people dissected his analysis, with many commentators questioning Owens’s underlying assertion that an online magazine isn’t legit unless it makes a profit. The irony, of course, is that one of the most successful online genre magazines around—and one specifically mentioned by Owens—is Strange Horizons, an e-zine which doesn’t even attempt to be profitable. Instead, this magazine operates as a 501(c)(3) non-profit and pays its authors and artists while the magazine’s staff work as unpaid volunteers. Obviously this model is successful since Strange Horizons is not only about to celebrate its 8th anniversary, the e-zine is also one of the dominant genre magazines either on or off the web.

One of the strengths of Strange Horizons’s non-profit e-zine model is they are very willing to take chances on new writers. This approach is in full bloom in the magazine’s June 2008 fiction offerings, with each of the five featured writers being essentially at the start of their careers. While several of them have stories forthcoming in magazines like Asimov’s and Baen’s Universe, for all of them, their story in Strange Horizons appears to be one of their first professional publications.

The first story, “On the Eyeball Floor” by Tina Connolly, is set in a fascinating futuristic cyborg factory, which more closely resembles an industrial-era heavy industry factory than what passes for manufacturing in the surgical-scrubs environment of today’s Silicon Valley. The story focuses on a factory worker named Bill, who helps the newly assembled cyborgs transcend into consciousness. You see, just as human kids need to develop their consciousness after birth, so too are cyborgs not instantly gifted with this most human of characteristics.

Unfortunately, helping cyborgs achieve consciousness is extremely draining. Every time Bill helps awaken a cyborg, he feels like he loses a piece of his own soul. As Bill descends into madness from this job pressure, he fixates on a defective female cyborg who can’t quite achieve consciousness. To make matters worse, the cyborg looks like a woman Bill lost out on to a fellow coworker. Part love triangle, part musing on what makes us human, the story starts off well but bogs down toward the end amidst too much ambiguity. Still, Connolly’s story is written with a keen ear for language and presents some fascinating imagery and ideas. She is definitely a writer to keep an eye on.

Running” by Benjamin Crowell is an updated take on the old science fiction standby of space station residents only receiving air and vital supplies if they contribute to the welfare of the entire space colony. In short, freeloaders are not permitted. So when Joe loses his job, marriage, and visa, but doesn’t take the next shuttle back to Earth, he is fitted with a device which measures the bare minimum of oxygen he’s permitted to consume until the next outbound flight. Unfortunately, this libertarian view of the future has been around so long that it’s barely even interesting. Worse, while Joe’s character is basically a good person, he doesn’t elicit a lot of sympathy from the reader because he’s so passive about his fate. I mean, he’s like “Oops, I missed the shuttle to Earth. Oops, I’ve been kicked out of my marriage. Oops, I lost my visa to stay in the space station.” When Joe finally does make a decision shortly before the end of the story, he merely proves that humans will do almost anything to survive. While this story is well written, it simply can’t move past the incredible weight of all the SF history on this subject.

In Lieu of a Thank You” by Gwynne Garfinkle is an updated take on those late-19th/early-20th century mad scientist stories like The Island of Doctor Moreau, in this case focusing on a gentleman researcher who is attempting to merge animals and humans into new hybrids. In Garfinkle’s version of this oft-told tale, the researcher has his henchman kidnap a proper Victorian lady, one Miss Vanessa Grand. After grandly showing Vanessa previous examples of his work—such as tropical fish which can fly—the researcher explains that he is going to graft butterfly wings onto Vanessa. But where the original mad scientist tales would have had the female victim falling into hysteria and screams at such horror, Vanessa’s response it totally unexpected—and forms the crux of the story.

Unfortunately, the dialogue and writing are a bit stilted at times, such as when the narrator states that “I am Miss Grand. Vanessa Grand. And I demand to know who you are and where you have taken me, and for what purpose.” Or when Vanessa thinks, “In that moment, at least, I knew I was alive.” Even though the author is obviously playing with the cliches and flat writing of 19th/early 20th-century horror literature, this approach causes the reader to stumble over certain phrases and dialogue. Still, Vanessa is a fun character, and the moment she gives her opinion on having butterfly wings grafted onto her body is priceless.

My Greedy Plea for Help” by Ted Prodromou is a philosophical exploration of magical wishes, and how both those granting wishes and those receiving them try to twist words to their own advantage. The story involves meta-wishes—such as wishing for more wishes—and mixes in the philosophy of Douglas Hofstadter, who helped popularize the term “meta” in his 1979 book Gödel, Escher, Bach. There is some clever wordplay in this story, but at only 770 words in length, this story isn’t truly a story. Instead, it is an anecdote of a man and a genie on a beach, with a weak plea to the reader at the end for a “wish lawyer, a lexicographer, a symbolic mathematician, and a fierce rhetorician.” Perhaps one of those people would enjoy the story, but most readers should give it a pass.

That brings us to the best of Strange Horizon’s June offerings: “Jimmy’s Roadside Cafe” by Ramsey Shehadeh. In recent years there has been a boom in post-apocalyptic tales, as evidenced by John Joseph Adams’s excellent anthology Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse, and the large number of TV shows and films on this subject, such as I Am Legend and Jericho. Theories on why this boom exists are many. Perhaps it is a cultural reaction to 9/11, terrorism, war, and politics. Or maybe the trend results from humanity’s general unease about where the future might go.

“Jimmy’s Roadside Cafe” fits 100% into this post-apocalyptic genre, with a plague having devastated the northeast corridor of the United States. Into this scene of devastation steps a lone survivor named Jimmy, who opens a thrown-together shack of a cafe in the median of an interstate clogged with abandoned cars. Even though Jimmy has, like everyone else, suffered horrible losses, he still tries to help those few survivors who come his way. Initially the reader will think he is crazy. But by the end of the story, we instead see that he is offering that rarest of gifts—human empathy—to a grieving world.

One problem I have with many post-apocalyptic tales is that the stories only showcase the worst of humanity. In grim times, both the best and worst of humanity are on display. The character of Jimmy definitely belongs to this better half, as he waits in his little shack like an off-kilter angel of mercy. This is a heart-breaking and heart-filling story, perfectly written in a sparse style, which makes it one of the most emotionally satisfying stories I’ve read in months. This will be on my long list of the year’s best stories and is highly recommended.

Returning to the aforementioned essay about the profitability of online magazines, it’s probably too much to ask that people stop questioning the viability of online genre publishing. But as Strange Horizons approaches its 8th anniversary, I suggest from this point on that anyone who whines about the viability of online genre publishing should have a great big cream pie of Strange Horizons thrown in their face. After all, connecting readers with great stories will always be the most important test of how viable an e-zine truly is. And in this regards, Strange Horizons continues to shine.

Best Short Story of the Year: Movement by Nancy Fulda

As we near the end of the year, the literary SF/F award season is ready to crash down upon us. Many of the year's best anthologies have announced their picks, the Nebulas are open for nominations, and everyone has an opinion about which stories are award-worthy.

In a few weeks I'll release my complete list of the stories and books I plan to nominate for the Hugo, Nebula, Locus, and other awards. But before then, I want to highlight one story which will absolutely be on my year's best list. In fact, it's hard to argue that this isn't hands down the best short story of the year.

The story I refer to is the amazing "Movement" by Nancy Fulda, originally published in the March 2011 Asimov's and reprinted online in both print and audio formats by Escape Pod.

As Nancy says over on her blog, "Movement" is about a "teenage girl with a fictional variant of autism and it toys with the intersections between neurology, temporal dynamics, evolution, and chaos theory." But as with all great stories, that summary doesn't begin to do it justice. I suggest you immediately go read it.

I think the reason I relate to the story's narrator is I have a similar sense of time and place. Perhaps this results from working as an archeologist, or perhaps this sense was always there. I simply can't help looking at the world and seeing it as if I'm an archeologist excavating everything from a thousand years in the future.

This hard SF story is insightful, lyrically written, moving, and eye-opening while retaining an almost effortless flow, and is one of the few stories I've immediate reread upon finishing.  I only hope that one day I can write a story equally as full of insight, emotion, and truth as "Movement."

Review of Strange Horizons, March 2009

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

Earlier this year I immersed myself in online fiction through the annual storySouth Million Writers Award, which it’s my joy to run. The great thing about the award is it’s a fun way to keep up with online fiction trends—and the biggest trend this year was how the number of quality online short fiction venues grew massively over last year. There are almost too many great stories being published online.

Which is, I guess, my lame-butt way of segueing into an excuse for why this review is so late. The truth is there’s so much online fiction being published these day I OD’ed on it for a while. By the time I was ready to resume reviewing Strange Horizons fiction for The Fix, I was staring at such a backlog of stories my procrastination synapses kicked in. I avoided reading the magazine, dreading the work before me.

Which was a lousy thing to do, because the March 2009 Strange Horizons stories are among the best they’ve published in recent memory.

First up is “Diana Comet” by Sandra McDonald, author of the SF trilogy The Outback Stars, The Stars Down Under, and the recently released The Stars Blue Yonder, all of which update traditional military space opera by adding in a female lead and romance. The result is a series not only filled with lots of action, but one which might help create a new subgenre of romantic military SF.

With her Strange Horizons story, McDonald leads readers into a totally new universe. Diana Comet, an upper-class reporter and self-professed “champion of the underclass,” has just arrived in the city of Massasoit, where she is searching for her vanished fiancé James. For fans of McDonald’s previous novels, the story is an abrupt change—instead of far future panoramas, the city of Massasoit is set in a slipstream-influenced 19th century, where the poor live truly wretched lives, and the rich tower above the filth and stench of the actual city.

While Diana might be seeking a straight-forward answer to what happened to her betrothed love, she keeps running headlong into secrets piled onto secrets. Not, of course, that she doesn’t also have her own unspeakables to keep hidden. As with all McDonald’s writings, this story is well written and a visual treat, taking the reader into a new world which is at once familiar and, with a second glance, totally unique. Recommended.

The next story is “Nira and I” by new writer Shweta Narayan. Shaya and her friend Nira witness the honor killing of Shaya’s beloved aunt Hemal, merely for being interested in a boy from another caste. But Hemal isn’t killed only for defying tradition; she is also murdered because her family fears by going against tradition she will invite the mists into their lives.

You see, in this land mists conceal everything—roads, houses, buildings—and a person who doesn’t remember how the land is supposed to exist can easily lose both their way and their life. Shaya, Nira, and all the members of her caste are rememberers, who help others find their way safely through these dangerous mists.

But Shaya and Nira are also kids, and as with all kids, they care little for the laws and customs which the older people follow. As they flaunt their caste rules, they discover the mists aren’t what they’ve been lead to believe. It also turns out there’s a way to get rid of the mists, but most people are too fearful to follow that path. At turns surreal, metaphoric, and frighteningly real, this is one of the most exciting stories I’ve read all year. Highly recommended.

Another new writer, Sean E. Markey, fills the next spot in Strange Horizons with his second person fantasy “The Spider in You.” In this world, people worship spider gods, which live in their houses. If you survive three of their bites, they’ll grant you strength and fortune for the rest of your life. The problem, though, is surviving those three bites. When children reach a certain age, they must be bitten, causing many to die. And that’s not even taking into consideration the bites from spiders which have no intention of letting their charges live.

This story is extremely disturbing, as it’s meant to be. And like “Nira and I,” the tale plays on metaphor to an interesting degree. But where “Nira and I” wrapped its social consciousness around wonderful characterization and a deep world view, “The Spider in You” is too stand-offish with its readers, likely due to the weak second-person narration. Still, it is an interesting read.

The final story from March is also the first pure science fiction story of the month, “Turning the Apples” by Tina Connolly. On a distant world, Szo sells cell phones to newly arrived tourists, who come for the world’s famous waterfalls and parks. The trick, though, is there’s an infection on this planet, which one-half of one percent of all off-world tourists come down with. As Connolly writes, “Getting infected makes your brain rewriteable. Surviving makes you able to rewrite.”

Szo is one such rewriter, able to reprogram the brains of infected tourists so they can be sent off to do horrific jobs like hauling radioactive waste. Rewriting someone’s brain is also an incredible high which Szo keeps trying to quit, only to be dragged back into the work by the criminals who run this racket.

“Turning the Apples” is a fascinating story which I totally enjoyed, with a great character in Szo. In fact, I was so wrapped up in the story I ignored a major believability issue until after I finished (i.e., that tourists would keep coming to an alien world where there’s even a slight chance they might disappear into a horrific infected life). Despite this minor quibble, fans of unusual science fiction stories will enjoy this tale.

Strange Horizons and the Ideal Story Length

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

What’s the ideal short story length? Such a simple question, yet one that’s impossible to answer without embracing the old cliché that “a short story should be only as long as needed to tell the story.”

According to the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, short stories fall into the following categories: true short stories, with fewer than 7,500 words; novelettes, between 7,500 and 17,500 words; and novellas, with more than 17,500 words. Anything longer than 40,000 words is deemed novel-length fiction. And while those are the official divisions of the short story—at least with regards to how the Nebula Awards are distributed—there’s a further informal classification for short stories, with stories under a thousand words being counted as flash fiction.

It would seem there’s a length for every type of fictional tale. However, that’s not how the publishing industry views the situation. For major book publishers, fiction revolves almost exclusively around the novel. Short stories—don’t even talk to publishers about short stories! While science fiction and fantasy novels sell very well, shorter speculative fiction is a hit and mostly miss affair. As a result, short stories are mainly published in genre magazines, few of which approach the sales of even the weakest genre novels.

This simple marketing fact sometimes results in strange twists in the life cycle of stories. For example, Greg Bear’s novelette, “Blood Music,” is often listed among the best science fiction novelettes of the last quarter century, having won both the Nebula and Hugo awards. A few years after writing the story, Bear expanded it into a novel which, while well received, doesn’t match the power of the original novelette. Even though the expanded novel was easier for publishers to market and sell—and it’s quite likely more people read the novel than the novelette—that doesn’t change the general critical opinion that the novelette was the perfect length for Bear’s classic story.

But again this begs the question, what is the ideal length for short stories? And again, the answer is: It depends.

The October, 2008, selections of Strange Horizons‘ fiction offer a perfect opportunity to explore the question of how long short stories should be. Some of these stories are perfectly suited for their allotted length. Some should have been expanded to more perfectly fit the tale.

The first, “Swan Song” by Joanne Merriam, takes us into the mundane life of a woman who sorts Medicare claims for a living, a job which pays well enough but is nothing to write home about. Mixed into her life are semi-comical but realistic episodes with her coworkers, a live-in boyfriend, and her mother.

But soon the narrator becomes aware that the people around her are having the same recurring dreams as they begin dying from an unknown disease. Worse, as this disease goes epidemic, those who get infected are unconcerned. The reason: the infected experience a deep feeling of being both completely understood and at perfect peace. As a result, the victims are happy and content right up until they die.

The story is very well written and also engaging, which is impressive because the first third deals with a rather boring look at a rather boring life. This is to be expected, as most day-to-day lives are boring. We wake up, we go to jobs we’d rather not do, we carry on at conversations we’d rather not have. But the strength of Merriam’s writing is that this day-to-day tedium holds as much poetry and resonance and insight as the more tense scenes later in the story, after the epidemic has been revealed.

“Swan Song” is a very good example of a midrange short story, hitting a mere 3,600 words. In fact, many critics consider the 3,000-word range to be the perfect short story length, if such perfection can actually be said to exist. “Swan Song” is just long enough for the reader to comfortably settle into, but not so long that the story begins to wear the reader down.

The next story, “The Lion and the Mouse” by Kaolin Imago Fire, is a futuristic retelling of the Aesop’s fable of the same name—the difference being that in this short tale, the robotic mouse is the one with the power while the outmoded lion is always weak. It is also an anti-fable, but not in good way. Unlike the original fable, which ends with its famous moral of “No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted,” this fable ends with a lot of flash and bang but no deeper resonance for the reader.

At 1007 words—just over the flash fiction length—”The Lion and the Mouse” is definitely the proper length for its story. But the problem is that, as with so many flash fiction stories, the author had to rely on clichés and jargon to compress the story to this length. This stylistic shortcut enables a quick connection for in-the-know readers, but can leave others with a case of “What the hell?” For example, in one short paragraph alone, the following terms and phrases are used without contextual definition or explanation: “molybdenum,” “learning routines, “broad spectrum white noise,” and “EM in a scrap Faraday cradle.” Any reader who isn’t up on their jargon will be lost. This makes the retelling read more like a computer programmer’s fable, designed to be enjoyed by one with the needed familiarity with the computer-based jargon, which the narrator throws around like the debris found in the mouse’s junkyard home.

Our next tale, “Just After Midnight” by Christie Skipper Ritchotte, is another piece of flash fiction, this time clocking in at a mere 624 words. But unlike “The Lion and the Mouse,” Ritchotte keeps the story’s focus firmly on characters the reader can relate to—in this case, a sister and her diseased brother. The disease, part of a larger epidemic which has devastated the world, has left the brother with the intelligence and behavior of a dog. The sister actually takes her brother for walks on a leash through their now dangerous neighborhood.

In line with my previous criticism of flash fiction, “Just After Midnight” relies at times on fictional shortcuts, such as not helping the reader understand words like “fem-skins.” Overall, though, “Just After Midnight” works well and carries a strong emotional punch. Because it is so short, it’s difficult to mention too many plot details without giving too much away. But let me just say that after finishing it, I couldn’t help but compare it to another dystopian story published this year, “Pump Six” by Paolo Bacigalupi (from his short story collection Pump Six and Other Stories). “Just After Midnight” contains many of the same themes as Bacigalupi’s much longer novella, and it would have been interesting to see “Just After Midnight” expanded to a longer length so the reader could experience more of this fascinating world and its amazing characters. So while I liked this story, I came away hungry for much more.

The final Strange Horizons‘ story is “Nine Sundays in a Row” by Kris Dikeman. This elegantly written piece is an exciting new take on a fantasy trope I’d thought nearly done to death—the trickster at the crossroads story. This time, the story is told from the point of view of the trickster’s dog, who watches over those poor souls who wait at the dark crossroads in vain attempts to win their heart’s desire.

The person wanting the trickster’s help this go around is a poor girl in a poor land, a setting much like the lush and damned Mississippi landscape where musician Robert Johnson supposedly made his own deal with the trickster. In this case, the girl is desperate to escape from a life which is literally killing her and dreams of becoming a card shark in that fabled gambling city in the distant western desert.

The dog isn’t having any of this. He knows that his master never lets anyone get the better of him on these deals. But as the dog and girl become friends, the dog realizes that there are limits to what he can do to save her life. In this conflict between helping the girl and obeying his master, the dog’s wonderful voice drags the reader through the tale like a chew toy with no chance—or desire—of escape.

I can’t praise Dikeman’s writing enough. She strikes the perfect note between evocative descriptions of the land and moving the tale along. She also creates memorable characters with just a few words and lines—characters which tug at your emotions as the tale winds down to its tragic, or perhaps uplifting, conclusion. An amazing story and highly recommended.

I should also add that at 4,700 words, “Nine Sundays in a Row” is the perfect length for this tale. If it had been expanded to novelette length, perhaps so the author could show us more of the poor girl’s heartbreaking life, the reader likely would have been numbed by the casual brutality of the setting. If the story had been shorter, the reader wouldn’t have been able to experience the nuance and beauty which emanates from the characters and their interactions with each other.

In the end, I suppose the only true answer to the question of the ideal short story length is indeed that old cliché. A story should be only as long as is needed to tell the story.

If, that is, the story is done right in the first place.

Strange Horizons and the Exclusionary Genre World

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

Science fiction writers have a dirty little secret: Sometimes we don’t like outsiders entering our imaginary worlds.

It’s not that we don’t like readers. After all, every literary genre lives only through the graces of that genre’s readers. The problem for science fiction writers, however, comes in explaining to the general public many of our genre’s current insights—concepts such as the singularity, neural downloads, nanotechnology, ansibles, and so on. While all these concepts are well known to science fiction insiders, they can easily confuse people who don’t continually immerse themselves in the genre. So every time science fiction authors write a story, they have to decide how much explanation they’re willing to give for ideas which their biggest fans are likely already familiar.

The result is a chasm between science fiction which is accessible to the general reading public and that which can only be appreciated by science fiction insiders.

In many ways, this issue with science fiction exclusion is a lesser echo of the problems within academic writing, where insider-laden jargon and references prohibit the general public from reading many academic works. This problem has become so bad that for a time Denis Dutton, editor of the scholarly journal Philosophy and Literature, ran a contest to highlight bad academic writing. Dutton’s experience with the contest led him to write an influential essay lambasting academic writing for its “language crimes.”

This raises two questions: Does science fiction risk going the way of academic writing, enjoyed by only a small insider group? Or can the genre still produce great works of literature for the larger reading public? Answers to both questions exist in the September, 2008, fiction published by Strange Horizons.

An example of a very good insider’s science fiction tale is “There Once Was a Fish” by Brandon Myers. This story is about a human scientist who loses herself—both physically and mentally—while exploring an alien species on a distant world. This species is far beyond humanity in both intelligence and how they exist in relation to our universe. While the scientist travels on this world, her young daughter, Milvia, whose age is never given but is likely five or six, remains behind on the scientist’s spaceship with a virtual intelligence called Nannynoo. When Milvia’s mother disappears among the aliens, Nannynoo encourages Milvia to save her mom.

Myers’s story is well written and, by showing this alien world through the eyes of a small child, offers an interesting view on humanity and the universe. The problem is that the story is too vague about its different plot devices, including Nannynoo’s artificial intelligence, the transcendent intelligence of the aliens, “reproduction by declension,” and how the aliens exist across multiple dimensions. Readers already familiar with such concepts will enjoy this story; newer readers to the genre will have a tough time and likely come away confused.

The only thing that didn’t work for me in Myers’s story was the opening epigraph, which is a made-up scientific quote from the child’s mother. The epigraph felt like the quotations one finds at the start of many academic tomes. While epigraphs are supposed to expound on the work’s theme, many authors use this device to showcase how profound their work is. The reality, of course, is that too often epigraphs have the opposite effect by making a work feel pretentious.

Pretentiousness, unfortunately, is a problem one encounters in the next Strange Horizons story, “Cowboy Angel” by Samantha Cope. Published in two parts, this tale isn’t technically science fiction, but neither is it any genre of speculative fiction except in the most fleeting of senses. The story follows the life of Roxanne, a tarot card reader who hooks up with an outlaw musician named Nick. Roxanne is always doing the wrong things in life as she runs full tilt toward her death, while Nick is one of those “misunderstood” geniuses who hide their deep inner selves by drinking and hurting everyone around them. As the story progresses, the readers experiences scenes of sex, motorcycles, and barroom musical performances intermixed with Nick abusing Roxanne.

There is a good story buried in “Cowboy Angel,” but it’s buried beyond hope of discovery in the tale’s endless narrative. In addition, the characters never reach beyond their stereotyped existence to fully engage the reader. It’s almost like Cope forced her story to go in a certain direction instead of letting the characters dictate their own path. This feeling is reinforced by the story’s section headers, which feature the names of famous tarot cards (and are supposed to reflect what happens in that section of the story). This literary device has been done to death in recent years and reinforces the awkward box into which this story was forced to live.

The next story, “Kimberley Ann Duray Is Not Afraid” by Leah Bobet, returns Strange Horizons to firm science fiction grounds. This is also a very good example of a story which can be embraced by those unfamiliar with the genre. Set in the near future, the story opens at what appears to be an abortion clinic, complete with protesters, a bombing, and staff both scared by the violence and committed to doing their duty. However, it quickly becomes apparent the clinic is actually there to help people change their skin color through a new medical procedure. Protesters scream that this is tantamount to genocide against specific ethnic groups, while supporters say the procedure merely proves that all racial categories are nothing more than social constructs.

The story is narrated by a white woman named Kim, who works at the clinic and is married to a black man named Colin. While Kim and Colin deeply love each other, they are also unable to move past the racism which both permeates their relationship and the greater world of the story. This conflict causes Kim and Colin to make an all-too-predictable decision as the story progresses.

Leah Bobet is a great up-and-coming writer. Unfortunately, this isn’t one of her best tales. The idea of changing one’s race has also been done before, most importantly by African American author George Schuyler in Black No More, a 1931 satirical novel in which a black doctor discovers a way to turn black people white. While Bobet’s story is interesting, it doesn’t carry the weight and impact it would have had even a decade or two ago. Still, this is a good example of how science fiction can explore deep issues while also remaining accessible to the general reading public.

The best Strange Horizons story this month is also one that manages to appeal to both science fiction insiders and the general reading public: “The Future Hunters” by Christopher J. Clarke.

Set in Australia four thousand years after Earth’s ecological collapse, the story is about a middle-aged engineer named Kale and her attempt to save her people. Despite the ecological problems of the world, Kale’s people have managed to stabilize their location so their small community can survive, if not thrive. However, as more and more of their children die each year, Kale knows their settlement has become so isolated and inbred that their eventual fate will be extinction unless new people are brought into the society.

Clarke’s story addresses a number of big scientific issues—including founder effects, genetic drift, and population bottlenecks—without over or under explaining these concepts. In both tone and language, Clarke’s tale wonderfully evokes Walter M. Miller, Jr.’s A Canticle for Leibowitz, one of the most famous examples of a science fiction novel which also appeals to readers outside the genre. “The Future Hunters” is highly recommended.

Earlier in this review I raised two questions, each of which pointed to the different paths science fiction can take as it tries to either broaden or narrow its audience. I don’t know which way the genre will go. And it isn’t necessary for science fiction to always appeal to all audiences. There is a place for stories which are narrowly tailored.

But as Christopher J. Clarke’s “The Future Hunters” so successfully shows, any population—or literature, in our case—which becomes too insular and inbred risks extinction. So I hope science fiction authors keep writing stories which attempt to reach beyond the genre’s already existing audience. Only by doing so will science fiction have a truly great future.

Yes, Not All Flash Fiction Is Bad

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

When my editor asked me to review the November 2008 offerings from Bruce Holland Rogers’s shortshortshort.com, I was tempted to ask if said editor knew of my reputation around flash fictional lands. After all, an essay I wrote a while back stirred up some angry feelings among flash fiction writers. This feeling was added to, no doubt, by my decision to exclude stories under a thousand words from consideration for the Million Writers Award for best online fiction, which I run each year.

That’s just me. As a reader, I prefer longer stories. And I sometimes wonder if that’s simply the nature of flash fiction. People either love these short short stories, or they hate the entire idea of them.

I’m well acquainted with the hurt feelings my view has caused because people email their feelings on the subject to me. Repeatedly. Years after my essay was buried in the wilds of the net, I still receive messages with words like “ignorant” and “unfair” in them. Perhaps I should have warned my editor, but I didn’t. So if any short short pitchforks need to be raised at such a biased reviewer as myself daring to review an author’s flash fiction, take the anger out on me. My editor is innocent.

That long introduction is my way of admitting I’m not a fan of flash fiction. So it is with baited breath that I await the reaction to this review, in which I totally enjoyed one of Bruce Holland Rogers’s flash fictional offerings, liked a second, and was frustrated as hell by the third.

The first story, “Acknowledgments,” is a hilarious take on all those pompous author acknowledgments we see at the start of books. How many times have you glanced over one of these acknowledgments—glanced over, because honestly, who reads them except the people named within—and you find your eyes glazing over at a clichéd opening like: “A book like this one is never the work of only the author…”

Well, what’s a cliché in the hands of one author turns into pure gold in another’s, as Rogers uses that very opening for “Acknowledgments.” From there he plumbs the depths of those people who truly helped the author in the creation of his latest literary masterpiece, people like that jerk of a professor who slept with his undergrads and got fired, thereby ensuring the author fell into the professor’s tenure-track job. While it’s probably a stretch to call this a true short story—it’s more of a wonderful joke—the story is great fun and laugh-out-loud hilarious.

The next story, “Alexandrian Light,” is a more traditional flash story. Two geologists sit in the middle of the Amazonian rain forest, waiting for one of three armies to reach them: the Russians, the Americans, or the Sino-Japanese. The three great powers are racing to claim the geologists’ discovery of an alien spaceship complete with dead aliens and all the secrets humanity can dare to imagine. But the geologists know none of these armies will treat them well for the discovery, so they do the only unspeakable thing they can think of.

The story is extremely well written and extremely visual, and starts off with a bang. But just as you settle in for the ride, it is over, with far too many questions unanswered. And that is my continual frustration with flash fiction. I’m the first to admit that if a story only needs 500 words to tell the story, then dang it, stick to the 500 words. But if a story needs several thousand to do the subject and setting and characters justice—which is the case with “Alexandrian Light”—please give me those extra words.

The last story is appropriately titled “The Last Man on Earth.” Not a word is said to why this is the last man on Earth, but once the man satisfies all his physical needs—food, shelter, and packs of dogs to protect him—he realizes that a man just isn’t a man without a woman. One day, he discovers a department store manikin and brings her home. From there, his descent into true loneliness and insanity begins. A good story, which accurately describes in only a few words what it took Richard Matheson an entire novel to accomplish with I Am Legend.

So there you have it—three stories, three different reactions. I repeat my earlier admissions of bias against flash fiction and leave it to others to determine whether I’ve been fair or not.

Strange Horizons and Writing What You Read

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

One of the clichés thrown at new writers is “Read the publications you submit to!” The reasoning being that each magazine’s fiction uniquely reflects the wants and desires of a particular editor. If a writer’s fiction doesn’t match what the editor already publishes, why waste everyone’s time by submitting to said editor?

As with all clichés, there’s some truth to this. People who read Sheila Williams’s Asimov’s Science Fiction or Gordon Van Gelder’s Fantasy & Science Fiction know the general type of stories to be found in those venues. That doesn’t mean Sheila or Gordon won’t still surprise—all great editors love to throw curveballs at readers—but I’d bet if you presented regular readers of those magazines with ten unidentified stories, most could state which stories belonged in which magazine.

The problem with this cliché, as with all clichés, is it doesn’t always hold true. For example, take the January 2009 fiction from Strange Horizons. I’ve been reading Strange Horizons for a number of years, and have been reviewing it on a regular basis for most of the last year. But just when I thought I’d nailed down the types of stories published in Strange Horizons, dang it if the editors didn’t pull a switcheroo to shock me out of my complacent talk of clichés.

Let me explain. Typically, Strange Horizon stories tend away from hard science fiction, instead embracing more of the fantasy and slipstream genres. Their stories also usually have a general literary feel—which for the sake of argument, I define as stories in which the voice and style matters more than plot, setting, or characters.

This isn’t meant as criticism. Stories that Analog: Science Fiction and Fact would publish—hard science fiction, with lots of action—would rarely find a home in Strange Horizons, and vice versa. Different magazines, different worlds of storytelling.

As an example of what I’ve come to expect from Strange Horizons, examine their first January, 2009, story: “Sisters of the Blessed Diving Order of Saint Peter and Saint Andrew” by A. C. Wise. This is a wonderfully sweet, singsong of a tale about Lucy, a girl raised by underwater nuns. Straddling the line between science fiction and fantasy—which is the hallmark of the slipstream favored by Strange Horizons—the story is a literary examination of how Lucy wants to stay in her underwater monastic order, but also desires to push beyond the order’s constraints and actually help people (and, specifically, dead people). Unfortunately, the order’s mother superior feels that the people Lucy wants to help are unclean, merely because they have the bad misfortune of being deceased. Naturally, Lucy doesn’t take this “hell no” as final, and seeks her own approach to helping the dead.

I really enjoyed this story, despite the fact not much actually happens plot-wise (although in many ways, this is a mirror of how most people live their lives, where not much appears to happen until after the fact, at which point we’re amazing at all which occurred). What carried me through Wise’s story is the author’s strong voice. As a result, the reader overlooks the tale’s weaker technical aspects, such as how this group of nuns could survive for decades underwater using nothing but hard-hat diving gear. All in all, this is a very good slipstream story that long-time Strange Horizons readers will enjoy.

And if that’s where Strange Horizons had stopped for the month, I wouldn’t be dwelling on the types of fiction published by different magazines. But instead, the next story I read is “Greetings from Kampala” by Angela Ambroz, a crazy science fiction ride which is both unsettling, irritating, fascinating, and one of the best character-driven stories I’ve read in a long while.

“Greetings from Kampala” is the story of Ghada, an African woman who took the “big drop” through a hole in space to serve as a soldier in the ongoing war between futuristic Hindu and Chinese empires. Unfortunately, each time one goes through a hole in space, you not only risk a very high chance of death, your very sanity is also placed up for grabs.

Ghada winds up on the spaceship Rahu Ket—saved in a rare act of wartime mercy—only to discover that the ship’s captain is her former boyfriend. Unfortunately, due to relativistic and space drop issues, her former boyfriend is now 40 year older than the last time she saw him, while she has aged a mere five years. As if that wasn’t maddening enough, Ghada is also harassed by an overworked ship doctor pretending to be a psychotherapist, who seeks to convince Ghada that she must examine the insanity in her life if she is to move beyond it.

As dictated by the subject matter and setting, this story’s narrative is difficult to embrace at times, and is likely to leave some readers with a deep sense of WTF? But this confusion also represents the life Ghada has been thrown into. As such, the story has a true New Wave feel to it, reminding me of Samuel R. Delany’s “Aye, and Gomorrah…” (minus the sex). I predict readers will either love or hate this story. Myself, I loved it. Highly recommended.

After reading a story which would have been nicely at home in Harlan Ellison’s Dangerous Visions, I wondered what the Strange Horizons editors were up to. Then came the next story—”The Shangri-La Affair” by Lavie Tidhar—and I knew the truth: the editors were messing with our minds, deliberately selecting stories we don’t expect to see in Strange Horizons.

Told in two parts, “The Shangri-La Affair” opens in a near-future Southeast Asia as an unnamed man books passage on a newly reconstituted Air America. Like its Vietnam War predecessor, this Air America flies “anything, anywhere, anytime,” and is one of the many covert players in the regional war now raging between various powers.

The story’s unnamed secret agent convinces pilot “Richard—but call me Rick”—to fly him into Vientiane, Laos, where the agent tries to track down an engineered virus called Shangri-La. It turns out Shangri-La is dangerous to the powers-that-be because Shangri-La causes people to embrace pure and total peace. However, the secret agent isn’t convinced that forcing people into a zombie-like peace is a good thing, so he aims to stop the virus from being unleashed.

Tidhar’s story reads like a drug-infused John Le Carré novel, if Le Carré wrote science fiction and dropped LSD as he pounded on the typewriter. The narrative is tense and action-based, pulling the reader through a story with flat-out beautiful prose. The result is a tale which is both fun to read, and a fascinating glimpse into the madness of future wars. All in all, an amazing accomplishment, and highly recommended.

So all hail the clichéd death of believing specific magazines can only publish specific types of stories. While magazines and editors do indeed develop their own voice, they can also break away from that voice. And as the case of Strange Horizons‘ January fiction shows, leaving a magazine’s voice behind can be a wonderful thing to behold.

Strange Horizons and the Big Questions in Life

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

It sometimes appears that humanity is fated to eternally ask deep questions while receiving few deep answers in return. Perhaps this is because we humans are very good at posing the big questions—What is the meaning of life? What is the nature of good and evil? Is there a God?—but not so good at finding equivalent answers.

That said, from the point of view of anyone who loves science fiction and fantasy, it’s probably a good thing that humanity doesn’t have too many deep answers. After all, one of the strengths of the speculative fiction genres is that genre stories can easily plumb the big questions and mysteries we all ponder. If humanity truly possessed all the answers to life, there wouldn’t be a need for fantasy or science fiction in the first place.

And so it is we turn to the July 2008 fiction offerings from Strange Horizons, where each story explores life’s big questions in its own unique way. The first tale, “Called Out to Snow Crease Farm” by Constance Cooper, is set on a distant world colonized by humans. Unfortunately, the world is extremely hostile to Earth based life-forms, so the settlers have been forced to do without cattle and other familiar farm animals. To survive, the settlers domesticated the planet’s alien life-forms for their own uses, even though without proper preparation, these animals are poisonous to consume.

Into this scenario steps Margit Gazaway, a newly minted veterinarian assigned to serve on this planet. Unfortunately, she hasn’t been trained in the biology of the planet’s strange animals, making her less knowledgeable in this area than the very farmers she is called on to help. So the big question for Margit is this: Is it better to admit to ignorance or pretend to knowledge one doesn’t have? By the end, Margit makes her choice as she discovers that the first step to true knowledge is admitting one’s ignorance. “Called Out to Snow Crease Farm” is nicely written, with lots of creative worldbuilding. Unfortunately, there is so much exposition needed to set up the story that the tale is heavily weighted down in its first half, creating a slow start from which the remaining half never quite recovers.

The next story, “The Magician’s House” by Meghan McCarron (published in two parts in Strange Horizons), takes a different approach to exploring the big questions of life, in this case by examining the process by which we learn to ask the right questions in our lives. McCarron starts the tale off as if desiring to create a hormonally charged teenage version of the novel Holes, as a nameless teenage girl digs holes in a magician’s backyard in an attempt to learn about the earth based power which exists in all magic. McCarron’s lush writing is on display in these opening sections, as she describes hole after hole in an extremely sensual, sexy manner. If this feels like an obvious play off the Freudian theories of dark caves and holes and such, then yes, that is exactly what McCarron is doing. This truth is seen again when the protagonist discovers her magic is wedded to the earth itself, leading her to create dark tunnels and climb into caves and rip just about every page out of Sigmund Freud’s psychosexual playbook.

This story is extremely tied up with teenage angst and hormones and dreams of growing up. But it is also about the protagonist’s search for the meaning to her life. The magician, with his tacky ’80s clothes and his orange and lime green furniture, is an unlikely mentor. But even as the reader is disturbed by the sexual relationship which develops between this teacher and pupil, we also realize the magician is correct when he says that awakening to our own lives and power is sometimes slow and safe, and sometimes fast and demanding. Either way, we have to choose how we awaken to life. And no matter our choice, the life we awaken to may not be the life we expected to find. So it is with the protagonist in this story.

Few writers could have pulled off this story without falling prey to the very sexual stereotypes which make up its meat and blood. But just like the scene where the nameless girl dances with other magicians around a raging fire—trying to stay on that fine line between being burned by the fire’s heat and frozen by the winter’s cold—McCarron’s lyrical prose enables the tale to dance close enough to these stereotypes to share their power and truths while also refusing to be singed by cliché. “The Magician’s House” will likely make many of the year’s best lists and is highly recommended.

The final July story from Strange Horizons is “Marsh Gods” by Ann Leckie. Set in an ancient marsh village, Voud is a ten-year-old girl whose family controls valuable local fishing rights. The story opens with Voud frightened because the men of her family are suffering mysterious deaths. When her last brother, the ne’er-do-well Irris, is killed, Voud suspects that a fellow villager is consorting with dark powers in an attempt to take her family’s wealth.

Anxious to learn what to do, Voud consults with the local marsh gods—brown cranes who have a compact to protect the village. Unfortunately, the gods are very limited in what they can do. If they lie, they lose their power, and the gods these days don’t have a lot of power to go around. But then Irris shows back up in the village, impossibly alive and showcasing a new and improved personality for all to see. Before long, Voud learns that not all gods lack for power.

This is a fun read centered around extremely believable characters—both human and gods—who are merely trying to survive in an ever-changing world. What takes the story beyond most fantasies is its central question: What is the difference between a lie which can never be true and a lie which is only a lie until the world itself is reshaped to turn lie into truth? This story is recommended for anyone who enjoys a good fantasy.

The common thread among these stories is that they function both as good fiction—with the engaging characterization, plot, and prose that are the hallmark of all top-notch short stories—and as philosophical laboratories where writer and reader can explore the big questions we all face. But don’t come to these stories expecting simple answers. Because good science fiction and fantasy stories are like a skilled magician, one who keeps the truth hidden even as her sleight of hand distracts the audience. You can so easily obsess over what happened to that rabbit, or where the cards in her hands disappeared to, that you only later realize how much more was going on than you could ever possibly understand.

Just like a great magician, science fiction and fantasy stories succeed when they trick the reader into seeing beyond the tale to the bigger questions in life. And in these three stories from Strange Horizons, this trickery is in full bloom. So sit back and enjoy. And don’t be disturbed if you leave these tales pondering questions to which we’ll never have any satisfactory answers.

Strange Horizons and New Writers of SF/F

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

Pity new writers of SF/F short stories. They come to the genre bubbling with exciting ideas and linguistic beauty, and smack right up against reality. The simple fact is that publishing short fiction in professional speculative fiction markets is not only downright hard, it’s also very much like the proverbial fart in a hurricane—no matter how much of a stink a new writer makes with their short fiction, they’ll gain only a fraction of the attention a decent first novel receives.

The problem is not the weakness of the short story genre or the magazines that publish these stories; the problem is that the publishing world is totally geared toward novel-length fiction. Readers go to bookstores looking for novels. Publishers promote SF/F novels to the almost total exclusion of everything else in the genre.

Which is, of course, a shame. The short story is the purest form of fictional storytelling, and it is through the practice of creating short stories that the best writers hone their craft. A decent writer can turn out a decent novel by dumping a ton of situations and characters into the medley and letting them go at each other. But if said writer did this with a short story, the story would be easily seen as the crap it is. As a result, short story writers learn to balance description, narrative, plot, characterization, and insight against the need for the story to both make sense and be beautifully told. To do otherwise is to guarantee that a short story will fail.

Because short stories demand so much from their authors, it is no coincidence that the best SF/F writers cut their teeth on the short story form. Before Gene Wolfe created the masterful Book of the New Sun—in which not a word or character or event isn’t tied to the greater plot—he created a number of top-notch short stories and novellas (which are now collected in the must-have collection The Best of Gene Wolfe: A Definitive Retrospective of His Finest Short Fiction).

Because new short stories writers have such potential, one of the most important roles SF/F magazines have is to cultivate new talent and bring them to the attention of readers. Yes, their stories may not gain as much attention as a first novel filled with epic fantasy hijinks. But discriminating readers know that in the long run, it’s the new writers of short fiction who will likely set the literary world on fire, not the writers who jumped in front of a computer one day and babbled their way to a 100,000 word first novel.

The February 2009 fiction from Strange Horizons features four stories from new writers. The first is “This Must Be the Place” by Elliott Bangs, which is also Elliott’s first professional publication. The story is the tale of Andrea, who is newly dumped, slightly drunk, and far from home when she meets Loren Wells in a San Francisco club. Loren is a fascinating guy who seems to already know Andrea, which simply can’t be true. But then Andrea discovers Loren’s secret: he is a time traveler from the future, reliving over and over what he consider the best year in history.

Elliott’s story is well-told, with a sharp style that enhances the story without ever overwhelming the actually storytelling. For example, when Andrea is dumped by a new boyfriend, she mutters that “All Bud had left me was a heap of dirty bowls and spoons, a crap sci-fi paperback, and that same old case of rabies,” with the rabies being her curiosity to discover who this Loren Wells character truly is. Because this is a first story, there is a small problem with the narrative. The story is set in 1984, but the reader doesn’t realize this until halfway through the story (meaning the writer should have set up this little fact better). But the mere fact that someone from the future would want to relive 1984 over and over delighted the hell out of me, while the story’s ending is as perfect as can be. As a result, the reader can’t help but overlook the story’s minor flaws. Recommended.

The next story is “Obedience” by Brenna Yovanoff, a new writer who has previously been published in Chizine. “Obedience” starts off as a typical zombie story, with the remnants of a military platoon pinned down in an old house by smirkers, the disease-created zombies who smile as they tear you to shreds. Private Grace is one of the platoon’s survivors, and she and a medic are on a wild-goose chase to see if the medic has truly stumbled onto a cure to the zombie disease.

Yovanoff’s story is fast-paced and exciting, although it doesn’t move beyond the zombie stereotype we’ve all seen of a small band of survivors fighting against an overwhelming tide of flesh-eaters. However, Yovanoff’s idea to have the zombie smile sends shivers up the spine, and the ending is a true reflection on people turning from high-minded ideas and beliefs when civilization itself is being destroyed.

The First Time We Met” by Maria Deira is the character-driven story about the different ways people become mutually dependent on each other. Narrated by a middle-aged Hector, the story focuses on his girlfriend Elena, who he met when they were teenagers. Elena can heal wounds and injuries with her saliva, and when she meets Hector and notices his bleeding arm, her first reaction is to lick this stranger’s wound.

If that sounds disgusting, this story probably isn’t for you, since the story also explores Elena’s pre-Hector relationship with a girl who cuts herself. Elena continually heals the girl’s wound, after which the girl cuts herself again to keep the two of them dependent on each other. While the story was a little scattered for my tastes, it was still a good read, which is always a great thing to say about an author’s first professional publication.

The final story is “Sometimes We Arrive Home” by K. Bird Lincoln, an author who has been previously published in Strange Horizons and an assortment of online magazines and print anthologies, but is still very much at the start of her career. “Sometimes We Arrive Home” is a short tale about Seri and Pimiko, two East Asian refugee girls who are transported to new worlds by their House and ever-controlling Mother. This story is very sensually told, with lush prose and vivid characterization. Lincoln also perfectly captures the mindset of young girls thrown into a strange universe, not an easy thing to do in only two thousand words. While the story is vague about many aspects of its setting and outcome, it is still a fascinating read.

So there we are: four new writers, and four stories to showcase their abilities. All of these writers deserve watching over the coming years.

Strange Horizons, Literati Scorn, and Escapist Reading

Note: A few years ago I wrote a series of monthly reviews for The Fix Short Fiction Review. Unfortunately, The Fix is no longer around so I'm reprinting these reviews on my website.
 

One of the classic knocks the literati give against speculative fiction is that the genre exists merely as escapist reading. This silly view holds that it’s wrong to read science fiction or fantasy simply to experience a different world, while the reverse—that it’s quite all right to read a highbrow literary novel and experience a different world—is totally acceptable.

In many ways, this dismissal of speculative fiction is reminiscent of the way 18th century English novels were initially dismissed by critics as “intellect-eroding” sentimental fiction because their audience was middle-class women. No doubt these solemn critics worried that too many women were daring to read novels as an escape from their expected wifely duties. The irony, of course, is that many of these escapist 18th century novels are now considered classics of the genre, praised by the same literary critics who turn around and heap scorn on speculative fiction for being mere escapism. Such is the circular nature of both life and literary snobbery.

The truth is that all art is, to one degree or another, escapism. For it is only by escaping our reality—be it the few seconds it takes to look at a painting or photograph, or the hours needed to read a novel or memoir—that we have the opportunity to consider events and themes far greater than our own lives. It is only through escapism that art reaches the heart of its audience.

I bring all this up because, on the most basic level, all four of the stories published in August 2008 by Strange Horizons are escapist reading. However, these stories take their escapism a step further by having as their joint theme an examination of people trying to escape from their own lives. Escapist stories about escapism! I’m not sure the literati could even begin to handle such an ironic turn of fictional events.

In “Down the Well” by Alaya Dawn Johnson, a bureaucrat is sent to end the career of a famous biologist, Dr. Roya, who has been running a secretive government project. A few years ago, this project created a wormhole connection to a Venus-like planet in another universe. Because the flow of time is different in this new universe—basically 23 Earth days pass for every million years in the new universe—Dr. Roya was able to play god on this barren planet and seed life. Since then, she has been shaping and observing this world as evolution unfolds across vast periods of time. The cost to Dr. Roya has been great. In just a few earth years, she has aged more than five decades due to the cost of living for brief periods in the new universe.

Now that Dr. Roya has created a complex, life-giving world, the government has decided to remove her from the project and use the world for its own ends. Hence the arrival of the bureaucrat to end Dr. Roya’s career. As Dr. Roya prepares to end her life’s work, she must decide if this new world was merely a place where she escaped to for most of her life, or if the new world is so important that she’s willing to risk everything to prevent others from corrupting her creation.

Like all of Johnson’s stories, this one is beautifully written, with evocative descriptions of the strange life forms Dr. Roya has created. Johnson also plays very nicely with the time-flow differences between the universes, which gives the story’s ending paragraph so much power. My main quibble is that it gets a bit too philosophical at times. In addition, since the bureaucrat narrating the story essentially agrees with and supports everything Dr. Roya does, the only conflict is with the unseen outside governmental forces which are now forcing Dr. Roya’s hand. Still, this is a thought-provoking tale and worth the read.

The next story is “The Emerald King” by J. Kenneth Sargeant, a new writer whose previous publications include a very good story, “Fort Bliss,” published last year in issue #11 of Paradox. In “The Emerald King,” Sargeant explores a near future in which a new drug called emeralds enables people to experience a shared fantasy world. The story focuses on one emerald addict being held in a mental institution. Every night, a troll appears in the addict’s padded room, taunting the addict with both the threat of mortal harm and the fact that the hospital orderlies can’t see the troll. The addict also worries that while he’s locked up he won’t be able to complete the mission given to him by his king.

As with the fiction of Philip K. Dick, the reader wonders if the addict is truly experiencing an alternate reality or if this so-called reality is a way for the addict to be manipulated into nefarious deeds by others. The doctors and nurses definitely hold to this latter view, but enough doubt is planted in the reader’s mind that the story plays off this tension in an effortless, easy flowing manner. Sargeant also makes perfect use of dialog to both tell his story and move the action along. Unfortunately, the story ends abruptly with what feels like a forced ending. This leaves the reader unsure about what exactly happened, and what the addict is trying to escape into or from.

Sex with Ghosts” by Sarah Kanning deals with what many people might see as the ultimate escape from reality—the ability to have sex with anyone you desire. In this near-future story, Carla is a beautiful but nonsexual woman working as the receptionist for a made-to-order sex business. Clients come in and place orders for different types of realistic human robots, which can look like a famous movie star, an old friend, or even your ex-wife. The clients then engage in lots of whoopee with said robots, all while paying up the whazoo for this privilege.

Until now, Carla has believed she’s seen every type of sexual fetish known to humanity. But then a client requests a sex robot in Carla’s image. Once Carla meets her double, she goes ballistic, which leads to an all-too-predictable ending. Carla also discovers that there’s not much she can do about someone creating a sex double of herself—which is one of my major issues with the story. Over the last decade, we have already seen movie stars and other famous people claiming copyright over their likeness. If the future plays out as this story imagines, it’s hard to believe that Carla will have no way to prevent this assault on her being. While Kanning does a good job exploring the world within the plot constraints she set up, the story just didn’t ring totally true in either how Carla merely accepts what is done to her or in how this world would allow something like this to happen.

The final escapist tale is “The Secret Identity” by Richard Butner. This short, elegantly written story is part ghost story, part boy-meets-girl romance, part slice-of-life vignette. The story follows the college life of Lona and Walter, two best friends, who act almost like a married couple. However, while Walter believes he knows all about Lona’s life, the truth is that both of them have their own secret lives they escape into from time to time. Then along comes a ghost, which shocks both Lona and Walter into discarding the costumes they have been wearing all this time and embrace the reality which is staring them dead in the face.

There is much to praise in this story, including how the complex characterizations of both Lona and Walter are revealed with a minimalistic approach to prose, and how Butner takes care to never reveal, or explain, the ghost at the center of the plot. “The Secret Identity” was originally published in a 2002 chapbook, and it’s great to see Strange Horizons bringing such a wonderful tale to a larger audience. It’s also telling that while this story could easily have found a home in The New Yorker or any other high-brow literary magazine, it took a speculative fiction magazine to actually bring this story before the public. Recommended.

Blog Posts Have Been Slow of Late...

...but only because life has been so busy for me. I'm editing two Million Writers Award anthologies and these books have totally consumed my free time recently. I'll have complete details on the anthologies, including the official table of contents and release dates, later this month.

Until then, here are some random thoughts and a few things to check out:

  • Weirdfictionreview.com launched yesterday and it's already creating an impressive buzz in speculative fiction circles. The website is devoted to The Weird and is the brainchild of Ann and Jeff VanderMeer. Until recently Ann edited Weird Tales Magazine and she co-edited with her husband The Weird: A Compendium of Strange & Dark Stories, a 750,000-word, 100-year retrospective of weird fiction. As for Jeff, he is known for writing very weird and wonderful fiction. I'm extremely excited that they've created this site, especially since Weird Tales no longer appears to be interested in publishing truly weird fiction. Among the highlights are an exclusive interview with Neil Gaiman about weird fiction and a translation of Thomas Owen’s short story “Kavar the Rat” by Edward Gauvin.
     
  • I keep watching Terra Nova even though the show can't decide if it wants to be a time-travelling Lost clone or a show for kids. Unfortunately, they keep mixing both extremes together, a blending on horrible display in Monday's "Bylaw" episode. The episode should have been called "Murder by Dinosaur" because that was the main plot point, aside from the kid-candy secondary story of a dinosaur hatching from an egg. The main reason I keep watching is because my kids like the show. But if Terra Nova keeps going like this my kids will soon experience one of my worst reoccuring childhood memories, i.e., having your favorite TV show cancelling in its first season.
     
  • My story "Her Scientifiction, Far Future, Medieval Fantasy" from Interzone 234 received a great review in Stephen Hunt's SFCrowsnest. Evidently I wrote "a whirlwind of a story that bashes together every trope of speculative fiction into a big chaotic adventure and it is tremendous fun to go along for the ride." Many thanks for the kind words.
     
  • My kids dragged me to see Real Steel and, for a robot boxing movie, it wasn't too bad. Since I expected to be banging my head on the seat in pain at this big-screen version of Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots, "not too bad" in this instance counts as a win.

When You Have a Chance to Meet an Editor, Say Hello!

One of the highlights of last weekend's Context convention – aside from hanging with great people like John ScalziMaurice BroaddusJohn Hornor Jacobs, and Jason Sizemore – was having the opportunity for a detailed discussion with David Hartwell. In case you don't know, Hartwell is a top editor with Tor Books and has decades of experience in the science fiction field. He has worked with a number of big name authors, including Philip K. Dick and Gene Wolfe (and was intimately involved in editing Wolfe's influential series The Book of the New Sun, which is one of the best literary works of the entire 20th century).

Hartwell and I sat beside each other at a "Meet the Authors" event and talked a good bit. One thing which stuck with me – and which Hartwell said I was free to share with others – was his shock at how few new writers had approached him at this convention. Considering that Context is geared toward writers, Hartwell expected a number of new authors to either pitch their novels or, if they didn't have a book ready, to at least introduce themselves. Instead, I was evidently one of the few writers he didn't personally know who engaged him in conversation.

This totally blew my mind. I mean, if you're serious about making it as a science fiction writer, why wouldn't you go up to a prominent SF editor and introduce yourself? Even if you get nervous around editors or don't have much to say, at least shake the man's hand. That way if you ever submit something to Hartwell you're not a total stranger.

As I mentioned, Context is aimed at writers, so I'm at a loss to explain why more writers didn't approach Hartwell. The only thing I can figure out is that there are a number of new authors out there who feel traditional publishing houses are not for them. One person I talked to at Context described these new authors as part of the "self-publishing subculture," which believes that to be a successful author all you need do is self-publish your book and attend conventions, where you sell copies to fellow authors who are also hawking their own self-published books.

Personally I feel that view is too dismissive of self-publishing, but it has a bit of truth. We've all met authors who believe success means selling a few dozen copies of their self-published book to friends and family. And if that's all they want, more power to them. But as a writer, I want to reach as many readers as possible. If self-publishing will do that, great. If traditional publishing will, that's also good. But no matter the route you take, one of the vital keys to writing success is to learn all you can about our industry.

Whether you want to self-publish your novel or are trying to land a traditional publishing contract, it is in every author's interest to make connections and talk with the editors in our field. And not simply because these editors might be able to help you with your career (although that is a big plus – remember, every editor out there lives for the moment when they discover a hot new writer). You see, editors are also a great source of information on what's going on in our genre and how the speculative fiction business works. This is information every author needs to know.

And to top it all off, most editors are fun people to talk to.

Yes, it would be nice if one day I'm able to submit a novel to David Hartwell and he remembers who I am. But equally as important, I had a great time talking with him. I learned a number of things about our genre I didn't know before.

So the next time you go to a con, say hello to the editors. 

Two Reviews

Here are two new reviews:

  • The first is by me, reviewing The Power of Six by Pittacus Lore (pseudonym of James Frey and Jobie Hughes). Overall I enjoyed the book, which is a fun read even if derivative and not extremely original. The best news is that as a book aimed at young readers, this novel might bring new readers to the science fiction genre. Check out my review at SFSignal.com.
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  • The second review is by Catherine Russel, who says my short story collection Never Never Stories "contains the most original speculative fiction that I’ve ever read" and that the book is "perfect for any fans of science fiction – especially genre tales that explore deeper themes." Many thanks to Catherine for the kind words. Read the entire review at Functional Nerds.

Weird Tales and Editorial Vision

Sad literary news today – Wildside Press is selling Weird Tales to Marvin Kaye, who also intends to edit the magazine. That means editor Ann VanderMeer, the person most responsible for this magazine's amazing transformation in recent years, is out, along with her entire staff. During Ann's tenure Weird Tales won one Hugo Award for Best Semi-Prozine – at the time being one of only 4 magazines not named Locus to win that award in 25 years – along with chalking up another three nominations. Ann also showed that a venerable magazine like Weird Tales could be both respectful to its literary history while also embracing exciting new authors and movements, most significantly around the New Weird.

One reason Weird Tales was so successful under Ann's guidance is the vision she has for fiction, a vision she strongly applied to the magazine. And it is this loss of vision which makes me now worry about the future of Weird Tales. While Marvin Kaye has a long editorial history, he is mainly known in this genre for editing reprint anthologies (along with some original anthologies and, of course, his own fiction writing).

However, there's a big difference between editing magazines and book anthologies. With both reprint and original anthologies, you are dealing with known qualities – in the case of reprint anthologies with already published stories, while original anthologies tend to feature well-known and established authors. Publishers encourage this last point because big names on a cover sell more books.

With a magazine, though, you are not only looking for stories by big names you are also combing through the slushpile for exciting new voices which mesh with your editorial vision. In fact, this is one of the most important services magazines provide to the genre field – bringing new writers to the attention of the public. This doesn't mean editing anthologies isn't also hard work. It most definitely is. But the skill sets are very different.

Which brings me back to what I mentioned earlier about Ann's vision. Without a strong editorial vision a magazine can easily founder in the marketplace. Unfortunately, my take on Kaye's vision, which is based on the type of stories he's published in his anthologies over the years, is of someone in love with storytelling as it used to exist. The fact that his first issue as editor of Weird Tales will be "Cthulhu-themed" supports this view.

I'm not alone in this thinking. On Twitter, John Joseph Adams was asked what he knew about Kaye and replied "Not much, but I would expect WT to revert to the magazine it was 30-40 years ago." Warren Ellis echoed this by saying that Kaye is "clearly very retro in his tastes."

Let me be clear that there is nothing wrong with enjoying and loving the best stories from previous years. I grew up on stories from the Golden Age of SF and I'll always love them. However, that doesn't mean I want to read new SF stories written as if our genre was stuck in the '40s and '50s. Likewise with Weird Tales. While the magazine was the original home of Cthulhu, I'd rather read exciting new stories of the bizarre than revisit the glories of the magazine's past.

Perhaps I'm wrong, but I believe this editorial change will prove to be a major mistake for Weird Tales.

What If They Gave a Hugo Award and No One Cared?

Overall, I'm not impressed with this year's Hugo Award winners. While I'm a fan of Connie Willis, Blackout/All Clear was not her best work and is the weakest novel(s) in decades to win both the Nebula and Hugo Awards. I'm also not surprised by this win. This was the establishment choice. But that said, I've yet to hear anyone raving about this novel the way people usually rave about a double award winner. (For more on my thoughts on this year's Hugo novel finalists, go here.)

In the short story category, I wasn't a big fan of any of the finalists, but of them Mary Robinette Kowal's story was the strongest. As for the novella and novellete categories, they were filled with very good and great finalists. I really liked Ted Chiang's The Lifecycle of Software Objects so I understand it winning, while in the novellete category I would have liked to see several other finalists win but am also okay with "The Emperor of Mars" by Allen M. Steele taking top honors.

But despite that, my general response to this year's fiction winners is "Eh, who cares." None of these winning stories excite me that much. As I mentioned, I liked The Lifecycle of Software Objects and of all the winners that's the one I come closest to being excited about. But compared to Chiang's great stories of previous years, this one was merely very good.

I should add that I'm very pleased by some of the other Hugo winners, especially Sheila Williams for best editor (an award which is long overdue) and Shaun Tan for best artist, while Clarkesworld taking top semi-prozine honors for the second year in a row proves the vitality of this great online magazine. I'm also thrilled Chicks Dig Time Lords: A Celebration of Doctor Who by the Women Who Love It won for best related work.

But I just wonder if anyone will care about these Hugo fiction winners a decade or two from now, or if they'll be seen as the type of safe picks which make people question the validity of literary awards.

I mean, is there anyone excited about this year's Hugo fiction winners?

Colin Harvey, Rest in Peace

The news of Colin Harvey's death is hitting me hard. While I never met Colin in person, we corresponded on a regular basis. Colin struck me as one of the good guys of the world. He was very supportive of new writers, both through his anthologies and in his very perceptive reviews. Among the first glowing reviews I ever received for my fiction were from Colin.

Colin also was an amazing SF writer, with a unique voice and style. If you haven't read any of his books and stories, please do.

My heart goes out to his family and to everyone who knew and loved him. And my tears go out for the entire SF genre at having such a talented and up-and-coming author struck down when he was just hitting his prime.